By Michael Hernandez
WASHINGTON (AA) - NASA and private aerospace manufacturer SpaceX are gearing to carry out a historic space launch Wednesday if poor weather conditions can be overcome.
If completed, the launch to the International Space Station will not only mark SpaceX's first manned launch, it will be the first privately-developed spacecraft to carry humans into space. It will also be the first time astronauts have been sent into outer space from the US since NASA ended its manned program in July 2011.
The launch could usher in a new era where private companies, not governments, send people into space.
Blastoff is slated for 4.43 p.m. local time (2043GMT), but weather around Cape Canaveral, Florida has been dicey with rain, clouds and thunderstorms that could derail plans.
Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, the two NASA astronauts that will be carried into space aboard a SpaceX Dragon reusable spacecraft, have already been loaded into the vessel ahead of launch.
They were driven to the launchpad in Tesla Model X's, the luxury SUV built by CEO Elon Musk's electric vehicle company. He is also the CEO of SpaceX.
"This is a dream come true, I think for me, and everyone at SpaceX," Musk said hours before the launch. "If somebody told me in 2002 that I would be standing here with NASA's administrator, meeting the astronauts, and the rocket and spacecraft on Pad 39A, the best pad in the world, it's an honor to be there, I would have thought 'man, I don't know what you're talking about.'"
US President Donald Trump is scheduled to deliver brief remarks prior to the launch.